Car Bombs in Two Iraqi Cities Kill 15 

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Two car bombs exploded in separate cities in Iraq 
(news - web sites) Tuesday, killing at least 14 Iraqis and one U.S. 
soldier. Dozens were wounded, including 10 American soldiers. A U.S. 
Marine was killed in action west of Baghdad. 

Elsewhere, six coalition soldiers � two Poles, three Slovaks and a 
Latvian � were killed in an explosion while defusing old mines and 
other ordnance at a munitions dump in Suwayrah, 25 miles south of 
Baghdad, authorities said. 

The Slovaks and the Latvians were the first deaths from either of the 
two countries in Iraq, Polish officials said in Warsaw. 

One of the car bombs blew up as a convoy of provincial council 
members passed by in the northern city of Mosul. The council members 
escaped injury, officials said. Nine people died and about 25 were 
injured, the U.S. military said. The Mosul deputy police chief was 
hurt, but not seriously. 

In the other attack, a suicide attacker detonated a car bomb during 
rush hour outside the American forward operating base War Horse in 
Baqouba, about 30 miles northeast of Baghdad. 

At least five Iraqis and one American soldier were killed, the U.S. 
military and police said. Fifteen Iraqis and 10 American soldiers 
were wounded while standing at a security checkpoint. 

A U.S. Marine was also killed in action, the military said Tuesday. 
The death occurred Monday in Anbar province west of Baghdad, but the 
military released no further details. 

In Ramadi, a Sunni Muslim city in Anbar province, a bomb exploded as 
a convoy of Westerners passed by, witnesses and police said Tuesday. 
The Westerners fired back after the Monday night attack. Hospital 
officials said eight Iraqis were killed and three injured. 

The identity of the Westerners was unclear, and there was no 
immediate comment from U.S. authorities. 

Attackers also fired several mortar rounds at a military base camp in 
the northern part of Mosul, the military said. Two contract employees 
received non-life-threatening injuries. 

Violence continues against U.S. forces and their allies in the 
countdown to the handover of sovereignty in Iraq on June 30. A car 
bomb exploded Sunday near the gate of another a U.S.-run base north 
of Baghdad, killing nine people and injuring 30 others � including 
two American soldiers. 

The latest violence occurred as the U.N. Security Council in New York 
prepares to vote on a U.S.-British resolution outlining a blueprint 
for post-occupation Iraq and giving international support to the new 
Iraqi leadership. 

Late Monday, the United States won important French and German 
approval for the resolution. The draft was revised four times over 
the past two weeks. It marks an end to the U.S.-led occupation and 
defines the relationship between the new government and the U.S.-led 
multinational force which will remain here after June 30. 

U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte said he expects the Security Council 
to approve the U.S.-British resolution on Tuesday afternoon, and 
council diplomats said the vote could be unanimous. 

France's foreign minister told France-Inter radio Tuesday that his 
government would vote for the resolution despite objections over 
language defining the roles of the new Iraqi administration and the 
U.S.-led multinational force. France is one of the five permanent 
council members that have veto power. 

"That doesn't stop us from a positive vote in New York to help in a 
constructive way to find a positive exit to this tragedy," Foreign 
Minister Michel Barnier. "We would have liked more specifics on what 
will happen in terms of stability, but for us that is not sufficient 
reason to oppose this resolution." 

The new Iraqi interim government has made security its top priority 
as it assumes more responsibility for running the country. The new 
prime minister, Iyad Allawi, is close to the CIA (news - web sites) 
and the State Department and as an exile leader headed an opposition 
group made up largely of former military officers who had broken with 
Saddam Hussein (news - web sites). 

In an effort to improve security, Allawi announced an agreement 
Monday by nine political parties to dissolve their militias, 
integrating some of their 102,000 fighters into the army and police 
and pensioning off the rest. 

The plan does not cover the most important militia fighting coalition 
forces � the al-Mahdi Army of radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr � or 
smaller groups that have sprouted across the country since the 
collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime in April 2003. 

Those groups will now be considered illegal. 

The main groups affected by the agreement are Kurdish peshmerga 
militiamen who fought alongside American troops during the 2003 
invasion that toppled Saddam. Most of the others had effectively 
dissolved already. The other main group still active is the Badr 
Brigade of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a 
mainstream Shiite party. 

U.S. officials want to disband the al-Mahdi Army and arrest al-Sadr 
for the April 2003 murder of a rival cleric, although authorities 
have deferred both goals to reduce tensions in the Shiite heartland 
south of Baghdad. Instead, the coalition has opted to let Allawi, 
himself a Shiite, and Shiite clerics deal with al-Sadr. 

Meanwhile, a spokesman for former Governing Council Member Ahmad 
Chalabi demanded that Jordan open a new investigation in fraud 
charges that led to Chalabi's 1991 conviction in absentia in a 
banking scandal. 

Chalabi's spokesman, Mithal al-Alusi, said the head of the Iraqi 
National Congress party was unfairly tried by a military court and 
that Chalabi can prove his innocence before a civilian panel. 



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